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The Patty Hearst Kidnapping

Berkeley, California, United StatesFebruary 4, 1974

"The Patty Hearst Kidnapping" is a duplicate entry for the Patricia Hearst case already covered in detail under "The Kidnapping of Patricia Hearst." On February 4, 1974, nineteen-year-old Patricia Hearst was abducted from her Berkeley apartment by the Symbionese Liberation Army, a domestic terrorist group demanding ransom in the form of food distribution to the poor. Within months, Hearst appeared to join her captors, participating in a San Francisco bank robbery and adopting the revolutionary name "Tania."

Hearst was arrested in September 1975 and tried in 1976. Defense attorney F. Lee Bailey argued she had been subjected to coercive persuasion — brainwashing — during her captivity. The jury rejected this defense and convicted her of bank robbery; she was sentenced to seven years. President Carter commuted her sentence in 1979, and President Clinton granted a full pardon in 2001.

The case remains one of the defining American criminal stories of the 1970s, raising enduring questions about the psychology of captivity, coercive control, and the limits of personal responsibility under extreme duress. Hearst went on to write a memoir and build a life in the public eye, a survivor whose story defied easy categorization.

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The Manson Family Murders

Los Angeles, California

In the late 1960s, Charles Manson — a charismatic ex-convict with messianic delusions — assembled a commune of mostly young, vulnerable followers at Spahn Ranch near Los Angeles, California. Manson preached an apocalyptic ideology he called "Helter Skelter," named after a Beatles song, which predicted a coming race war he intended to trigger through acts of spectacular violence. On the night of August 8–9, 1969, Manson sent four followers — Tex Watson, Susan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel, and Linda Kasabian — to the home of film director Roman Polanski on Cielo Drive, where they murdered five people including pregnant actress Sharon Tate. The following night, a different group killed Leno and Rosemary LaBianca in their home nearby, leaving the word "HEALTER SKELTER" scrawled in blood on the refrigerator. Los Angeles police initially failed to connect the two crime scenes. The break came when Susan Atkins, jailed on an unrelated charge, boasted about the murders to a cellmate. Atkins and other Family members were arrested in late 1969; Manson was already in custody on an unrelated weapons charge. The subsequent investigation revealed the full scope of the Family's violence, which investigators came to believe included additional murders. Linda Kasabian agreed to testify for the prosecution in exchange for immunity. The Manson Family trial, beginning in June 1970, was among the most circus-like in American history: Manson carved an X into his forehead during proceedings, the female defendants shaved their heads and sang on the courthouse steps, and Manson threatened and intimidated witnesses. All four primary defendants — Manson, Atkins, Krenwinkel, and Watson — were convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death. Those sentences were automatically commuted to life imprisonment when California briefly abolished the death penalty in 1972. Charles Manson was denied parole twelve times before dying of cardiac arrest in November 2017 at age eighty-three. The case fundamentally changed American perceptions of cult danger, the vulnerability of young people to charismatic manipulation, and the fragility of the idealistic counterculture. Manson became a grotesque cultural icon — his face among the most recognized symbols of evil in American history — and the murders are still widely cited as the moment the innocent spirit of the 1960s definitively ended.